Using FormData Objects

The FormData object lets you compile a set of key/value pairs to send using the Fetch or XMLHttpRequest API. It is primarily intended for use in sending form data, but can be used independently from forms in order to transmit keyed data. The transmitted data is in the same format that the form's submit() method would use to send the data if the form's encoding type were set to multipart/form-data.

Creating a FormData object from scratch

You can build a FormData object yourself, instantiating it then appending fields to it by calling its append() method, like this:

js
const send = document.querySelector("#send");

send.addEventListener("click", async () => {
  const formData = new FormData();
  formData.append("username", "Groucho");
  formData.append("accountnum", 123456);

  // A file <input> element
  const avatar = document.querySelector("#avatar");
  formData.append("avatar", avatar.files[0]);

  // JavaScript file-like object
  const content = '<q id="a"><span id="b">hey!</span></q>';
  const blob = new Blob([content], { type: "text/xml" });
  formData.append("webmasterfile", blob);

  const response = await fetch("http://example.org/post", {
    method: "POST",
    body: formData,
  });
  console.log(await response.json());
});

Note: The fields "avatar" and "webmasterfile" both contain a file. The number assigned to the field "accountnum" is immediately converted into a string by the FormData.append() method (the field's value can be a Blob, File, or a string. If the value is neither a Blob nor a File, the value is converted to a string).

This example builds a FormData instance containing values for fields named "username", "accountnum", "avatar" and "webmasterfile", then uses fetch() to send the form's data. The field "webmasterfile" is a Blob. A Blob object represents a file-like object of immutable, raw data. Blobs represent data that isn't necessarily in a JavaScript-native format. The File interface is based on Blob, inheriting blob functionality and expanding it to support files on the user's system. In order to build a Blob you can invoke the Blob() constructor.

Retrieving a FormData object from an HTML form

To construct a FormData object that contains the data from an existing <form>, specify that form element when creating the FormData object:

Note: FormData will only use input fields that use the name attribute.

js
const formData = new FormData(someFormElement);

For example:

js
const send = document.querySelector("#send");

send.addEventListener("click", async () => {
  // A <form> element
  const userInfo = document.querySelector("#user-info");
  const formData = new FormData(userInfo);

  const response = await fetch("http://example.org/post", {
    method: "POST",
    body: formData,
  });
  console.log(await response.json());
});

You can also append additional data to the FormData object between retrieving it from a form and sending it, like this:

js
const send = document.querySelector("#send");

send.addEventListener("click", async () => {
  const userInfo = document.querySelector("#user-info");
  const formData = new FormData(userInfo);
  formData.append("serialnumber", 12345);

  const response = await fetch("http://example.org/post", {
    method: "POST",
    body: formData,
  });
  console.log(await response.json());
});

This lets you augment the form's data before sending it along, to include additional information that's not necessarily user-editable.

Sending files using a FormData object

You can also send files using FormData. Include an <input> element of type file in your <form>:

html
<form enctype="multipart/form-data" method="post" name="fileinfo" id="fileinfo">
  <p>
    <label
      >Your email address:
      <input
        type="email"
        autocomplete="on"
        name="userid"
        placeholder="email"
        required
        size="32"
        maxlength="64" />
    </label>
  </p>
  <p>
    <label
      >Custom file label:
      <input type="text" name="filelabel" size="12" maxlength="32" />
    </label>
  </p>
  <p>
    <label
      >File to stash:
      <input type="file" name="file" required />
    </label>
  </p>
  <p>
    <input type="submit" value="Stash the file!" />
  </p>
</form>

Then you can send it using code like the following:

js
const form = document.querySelector("#fileinfo");

form.addEventListener("submit", async (event) => {
  const formData = new FormData(form);

  formData.append("CustomField", "This is some extra data");

  const response = await fetch("stash.php", {
    method: "POST",
    body: formData,
  });
  event.preventDefault();
});

Note: If you pass in a reference to the form, the request HTTP method specified in the form will be used over the method specified in the open() call.

Warning: When using FormData to submit POST requests using XMLHttpRequest or the Fetch API with the multipart/form-data content type (e.g. when uploading files and blobs to the server), do not explicitly set the Content-Type header on the request. Doing so will prevent the browser from being able to set the Content-Type header with the boundary expression it will use to delimit form fields in the request body.

You can also append a File or Blob directly to the FormData object, like this:

js
data.append("myfile", myBlob, "filename.txt");

When using the append() method it is possible to use the third optional parameter to pass a filename inside the Content-Disposition header that is sent to the server. When no filename is specified (or the parameter isn't supported), the name "blob" is used.

Using a formdata event

The formdata event, more recent than the FormData object, is fired on an HTMLFormElement object after the entry list representing the form's data is constructed. This happens when the form is submitted, but can also be triggered by the invocation of a FormData() constructor.

This allows a FormData object to be quickly obtained in response to a formdata event firing, rather than needing to put it together yourself.

For example, in the JavaScript we can reference a form:

js
const formElem = document.querySelector("form");

In our submit event handler we use preventDefault to stop the default form submission, then invoke a FormData() constructor to trigger the formdata event:

js
formElem.addEventListener("submit", (e) => {
  // on form submission, prevent default
  e.preventDefault();

  // construct a FormData object, which fires the formdata event
  new FormData(formElem);
});

When the formdata event fires we can access the FormData object using FormDataEvent.formData, then do what we like with it (below we post it to the server using XMLHttpRequest).

js
formElem.addEventListener("formdata", (e) => {
  console.log("formdata fired");

  // Get the form data from the event object
  const data = e.formData;
  for (const value of data.values()) {
    console.log(value);
  }

  // Submit the data via fetch()
  fetch("/formHandler", {
    method: "POST",
    body: data,
  });
});

Gotchas

The FormData object doesn't include data from the fields that are disabled or the fieldsets that are disabled.

See also